I was 12 YEARS OLD and was learning to play the guitar to accompany myself when I sang. Three years later, I was an opening act for RICKY NELSON at the "Santa Clara County Fair" in San Jose, CA. Those were great days for me. I can't believe how so much time has passed.
1958, 9 yrs old in St Paul MN 🥶...the schools,churches,beach,stores,campgrounds,state fair,& the streets were all quite safe,11 in a blue collar 🏠,🍀🍀for America in those times...
Two years before the world was graced with my presence lol 😆 But I do remember the 7th voyage of Sinbad from reruns, and of course, the Chipmunk Christmas song is still a classic! 👍👍👍👍👍
Before my time, but I know I would have loved being in that time. So much I know from it. So much I love from it. Today blows. I would have loved there being no internet or cable TV. Just AM radio. Most cars/trucks having manual transmissions. Soda pop in glass bottles. Comic books for a dime. Going to the drive-in to see a movie. So much more to love. Thanks for another trip Fred. Every one of them is worth the price of admission. Well, you know what I mean (I think???).
I turned 13 in 1958. A very impressionable time for a teen boy... and wow, was I impressed by everything. Brings back some great - and a few not so great - memories. (When you have two older brothers, stuff happens!)
I was born in May '57, so all this is 'new' to me. A very good overview of what was happening this month in 1958. The only mistake was the '58 Chevy commercial starting at 3:15. The '59 Chevy would have been advertised this month, having already been out since that October. THIS ad would have run in December 1957.
The peak of my parents’ teen years. If you wanted to experience the classic 1950s that most picture in their heads, then you needed to be born in 1941 as my parents were. They really hit it on the money! (As for Ray Harryhausen- I was obsessed with him as a kid. He was one of several inspirations for me when I was growing up … what a genius he was!)
Fred, you did it again. This is a great presentation. Thank You! At the end, I was reminded of “The Witch Doctor” - “ooh eeh-ooh a-a. Ting tang - Walla Walla bing bang”.
Well, I was 4 in 1958 so I wasn't doing a whole lot to keep the free world free. I did manage to scrawl my name and phone number on an entry to win tickets to see Jerry Lewis (no Dean) in a show held in our city's Coliseum (AKA the Cow Barn). I won. My grandparents said, "If Dean isn't performing, we don't want to go." My parents weren't thrilled but they wanted to congratulate me on knowing my name and phone number. So, the 3 of us drove over to the Coliseum where our seats were on the floor, first row. Jerry wandered out and walked around singing his off-key rendition of "That Old Black Magic". He followed that with some jokes doing his famous cackle laugh. My mother and father and many other audience members did not approve of the "augmented" jokes. [I had seen Jerry doing his schtick on TV variety shows and the jokes were indeed different.] He then clowned around with the conductor and did a couple of upbeat songs. The audience was restless. People were tapping their toes and I heard "When's the intermission?" being whispered. Jerry took a break and the audience did a break-out to their cars, carrying their coats with them. My mom reviewed the program, making sure that Deano was definitely NOT going to make an appearance. Over half of the audience, including the 3 of us, did not return for the second half. The next year (1959) I was 5🎉 and decided to try my luck with that year's raffle. I won again. The prize was something called a Dutch oven. We brought it home and put it in the kitchen where it sat unused for 30 years until my parents died and a nice lady came to the "estate sale" and asked me if I would sell it to her for $10.00 because she had always wanted one to make special dinners for her family. I told her "Please take it to your home and enjoy it - complements of my family."
Fred, my memories of that evening are crystal clear. But I can't remember what I had for lunch yesterday. Maybe that's OK because I won't be bored if I have the same thing for lunch today (and maybe tomorrow too).
@@marthawelch4289 I think the key to memory is thinking about events and moments again and again though the years. We don't usually think about lunch after we've had it.
Thanks Fred I was 7 years old in 1958 and already a rock-n-roll fan I drove my father crazy playing my 45 of shake rattle n roll over an over until my dad made me stop love your videos
I was 6 years old. Every Saturday my brother and I and all the neighborhood kids went to the kiddie matinee at our neighborhood movie theater. The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad was shown several times a year. The cyclops was my undoing.
You need to assemble all of these Chronologically. Each video is a visual, auditory, and participatory reflection of the historical growth of American Popular Culture. They are segmented history lessons. Each one shows "our" unique-timely American(ism) and how we amplified culture(s) here and globally.
Benjamin, by chronologically do you mean the video itself or the America We Knew series? To do the former, it would be too difficult and time consuming, would probably hurt the flow of the video and wouldn't be as much fun for me. As for the latter, of course if you've been watching you know I started with Feb. of '74 and have been posting each month chronologically (presently on June '76). Then I started to backtrack, posting various months as "specials." But thanks for referring to the videos as being a reflection of the historical growth of American pop culture, which is exactly what I intended and hoped to achieve.
@@FredFlix Benjamin's proposal sounds reasonable if you were to create a RUclips playlist ordered by the era of each video. So a playlist for 1958 would start with your video for the earliest date you did in 1958, etc. You have so much content now that you could easily create one playlist for every year. It would be work but it wouldn't require editing every video. Just create a play list for each year and drop the videos for that year into it in order.
OK, Simon? OK! The very month and year my baby sister was born. I still don't know how to tell her I love her, but we're both still here. I'm pretty sure that any ad for 1958 model cars would have been aired in the autumn of 1957. Just sayin'. Those monster movies were the bread and butter of my weekend afternoon TV and Saturday matinee movies in the '60s. I'm still watching some of these TV shows on MeTV, but without the weird old commercials. Now we have weirder new commercials.
Monster on the Campus!!!!!!!! I was minus 13 months in 1958, but saw this over here in Australia when I was 8 or 9 in the late 60's - downloaded it a couple of years back and am gonna kick back one wintery night and have a blast watching this silly, but childhood memory, movie. Again Frederick, loving your work - I actually can appreciate the amount of work in gathering, sorting, editing and fine-tuning each video you post - stellar work!
Wonderful video! All a person has to do is compare this video with one of your videos from the 60s or 70s to see how much our nation and culture changed. Your videos are not only entertaining but have great educational value in teaching people how our country changed and evolved pre-Kennedy to post-Kennedy (or "Camelot" as some say:)! Your videos are actually great teaching tools! Thank you! 😀
I would love to travel to the 50s for a short visit like Michael J Fox in Back to the Future - Colgate having toothpaste in a can similar to ones for shaving cream seems like a precursor to the Colgate pump they would come out with in the mid 80s
The monsters from The 7th Voyage of Simbad remind me those of Jason and the Argonauts. 🤔 Those comic books at 12:12 must have been at home. They look so familiar. Lestoil! Ha! ... and of course, Colgate with Gardol. Not bad for a four and a half year old. 💜🤟
Great nostalgia trip, Fred! '58 looked like a great year. I have 7th Voyage, along with several other Harryhausen titles. Great stuff. Love the Paul Frees narration for Monster on the Campus.
The Teddy Bears only had that one hit record, but two of their members went on to varying degrees of fame. Lead singer Annette Kleinbard later changed her name to Carol Connors and wrote or co-wrote some big hits, including "Hey Little Cobra" by The Rip Chords, and Bill Conti's "Theme from Rocky (Gonna Fly Now)". The guy on the left, of course, is Phil Spector, who needs no introduction whatsoever.
I find the late '50s and the early '60s interesting. Goody-two-shoes girls and sexy bad girls. Ricky Nelson and Elvis. Wholesome films and horror films. The cold war was in full swing, and I think that horror movies were, in a sense, playing on the fear of the Dirty Commies coming to take over America.
The first thing I thought of the was '58 Chevy, mainly because of the perfect example in American Graffiti. That would've been a spectacular time to be around in America. I missed it by a few years.
I was 12 YEARS OLD and was learning to play the guitar to accompany myself when I sang. Three years later, I was an opening act for RICKY NELSON at the "Santa Clara County Fair" in San Jose, CA. Those were great days for me. I can't believe how so much time has passed.
That's amazing, fob1xxl.
Imagining anything rural in San Jose is remarkable. Great comment.
1958, 9 yrs old in St Paul MN 🥶...the schools,churches,beach,stores,campgrounds,state fair,& the streets were all quite safe,11 in a blue collar 🏠,🍀🍀for America in those times...
@@lablaine1981 Things a probably safer today. The appeal of yesteryear is simply we were all much younger.
I was born in 1950. This was the best decade to live in. Proud to be a baby boomer. Thank you Fred for this channel. God bless you!!
I appreciate that, Marsha.
Just over a year old and entering a world of the rocket age, classic cars, Giants football,and George Pal… who could ask for anything more?
Two years before the world was graced with my presence lol 😆 But I do remember the 7th voyage of Sinbad from reruns, and of course, the Chipmunk Christmas song is still a classic! 👍👍👍👍👍
I was born in December 1958. I really enjoy looking at what my parents were looking at and watching while enjoying their 1st of 5 children.
Me too Dec 1.
Lordy, I was 4 years old but I still remember some of these movies. I've gone back and picked up the pulp magazines on DVDs
a GREAT year in American History!!
Before my time, but I know I would have loved being in that time. So much I know from it. So much I love from it. Today blows. I would have loved there being no internet or cable TV. Just AM radio. Most cars/trucks having manual transmissions. Soda pop in glass bottles. Comic books for a dime. Going to the drive-in to see a movie. So much more to love. Thanks for another trip Fred. Every one of them is worth the price of admission. Well, you know what I mean (I think???).
We had regular TV then.
I still have a few comic books,some with free coupons for Palisades Park.
@@rentslavethere was nothing better than regular TV channels Man 2 and 4 and 7 and then syndication with channel 5 9 and 11 w o r wpix and fox
@@rentslaveand yeah I got a lot of comic books in old magazines like famous monsters and creepy and eerie in comic books from the 50s and 60s and 70s
I turned 13 in 1958. A very impressionable time for a teen boy... and wow, was I impressed by everything. Brings back some great - and a few not so great - memories. (When you have two older brothers, stuff happens!)
I was born in May '57, so all this is 'new' to me. A very good overview of what was happening this month in 1958. The only mistake was the '58 Chevy commercial starting at 3:15. The '59 Chevy would have been advertised this month, having already been out since that October. THIS ad would have run in December 1957.
I was 5 years old all over again. Such great memories. Thanks again Fred. I love your channel. 👍🏻❤️
Much appreciated, Ralph.
As of today with all in the news woudn't it be great to go back to the america we used to know .
65 years ago, Chicago experienced the tragedy of the Our Lady Of Angels school fire. A moment in history never to be forgotten.
Thank You, FredFlix. 🙏
You're welcome, Luis.
Hard to believe i was 6 in 1958. I still ( somehow) remember a lot of this. Boy, i miss those days! 🤠🌲🌲 🎼
The peak of my parents’ teen years. If you wanted to experience the classic 1950s that most picture in their heads, then you needed to be born in 1941 as my parents were. They really hit it on the money! (As for Ray Harryhausen- I was obsessed with him as a kid. He was one of several inspirations for me when I was growing up … what a genius he was!)
Fred, you did it again. This is a great presentation. Thank You! At the end, I was reminded of “The Witch Doctor” - “ooh eeh-ooh a-a. Ting tang - Walla Walla bing bang”.
Would liked to have used that, David, but it wasn't on the charts that month.
@@FredFlix you are the one to know!
Cool to see these things from a bit before my day.
Thanks, Fred! We've certainly seen the world change a lot in our lifetimes. My dad was a regional sales manager for Colgate Palmolive for many years.
Sounds like clean living for your family, CN.
Thank you Fred I have had a crappy couple weeks and I am grateful you posted such a lovely mood elevator!😂
Happy to be of help, Chantelle.
That was the perfect ending for a wonderful look back, thank you Fred!!!!
Quite welcome, Bridget.
Well, I was 4 in 1958 so I wasn't doing a whole lot to keep the free world free.
I did manage to scrawl my name and phone number on an entry to win tickets to see Jerry Lewis (no Dean) in a show held in our city's Coliseum (AKA the Cow Barn). I won.
My grandparents said, "If Dean isn't performing, we don't want to go." My parents weren't thrilled but they wanted to congratulate me on knowing my name and phone number.
So, the 3 of us drove over to the Coliseum where our seats were on the floor, first row.
Jerry wandered out and walked around singing his off-key rendition of "That Old Black Magic". He followed that with some jokes doing his famous cackle laugh. My mother and father and many other audience members did not approve of the "augmented" jokes. [I had seen Jerry doing his schtick on TV variety shows and the jokes were indeed different.] He then clowned around with the conductor and did a couple of upbeat songs.
The audience was restless. People were tapping their toes and I heard "When's the intermission?" being whispered.
Jerry took a break and the audience did a break-out to their cars, carrying their coats with them. My mom reviewed the program, making sure that Deano was definitely NOT going to make an appearance.
Over half of the audience, including the 3 of us, did not return for the second half.
The next year (1959) I was 5🎉 and decided to try my luck with that year's raffle. I won again.
The prize was something called a Dutch oven. We brought it home and put it in the kitchen where it sat unused for 30 years until my parents died and a nice lady came to the "estate sale" and asked me if I would sell it to her for $10.00 because she had always wanted one to make special dinners for her family. I told her "Please take it to your home and enjoy it - complements of my family."
I was 4 as well, Martha, but I'm sure I would not have remembered so many details even from such an unusual evening. That's remarkable!
Fred, my memories of that evening are crystal clear.
But I can't remember what I had for lunch yesterday.
Maybe that's OK because I won't be bored if I have the same thing for lunch today (and maybe tomorrow too).
@@marthawelch4289 I think the key to memory is thinking about events and moments again and again though the years. We don't usually think about lunch after we've had it.
@@FredFlix Good point, Fred.
I was only three. In this particular video, it was fun to watch what my parents were viewing back then.❤ thank you
You're welcome, Jan. I was four.
Thanks very much for this one. This is the year that I was born.
You're welcome, Rippypoo.
❤❤❤❤it..amazing thank you so much my friend Fred
You're welcome, friend Brenda.
Thanks Fred I was 7 years old in 1958 and already a rock-n-roll fan I drove my father crazy playing my 45 of shake rattle n roll over an over until my dad made me stop love your videos
Thanks, Bob.
I was 6 years old. Every Saturday my brother and I and all the neighborhood kids went to the kiddie matinee at our neighborhood movie theater. The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad was shown several times a year. The cyclops was my undoing.
🎥Thank you for this wonderful gem!😎💯💥👍🙂!
You're welcome, Frank.
The 50's was before I was born, but that Sinbad Movie was in the theaters in the early 70's and was a big deal with us kids.
You need to assemble all of these Chronologically. Each video is a visual, auditory, and participatory reflection of the historical growth of American Popular Culture. They are segmented history lessons. Each one shows "our" unique-timely American(ism) and how we amplified culture(s) here and globally.
Benjamin, by chronologically do you mean the video itself or the America We Knew series? To do the former, it would be too difficult and time consuming, would probably hurt the flow of the video and wouldn't be as much fun for me. As for the latter, of course if you've been watching you know I started with Feb. of '74 and have been posting each month chronologically (presently on June '76). Then I started to backtrack, posting various months as "specials." But thanks for referring to the videos as being a reflection of the historical growth of American pop culture, which is exactly what I intended and hoped to achieve.
@@FredFlix Benjamin's proposal sounds reasonable if you were to create a RUclips playlist ordered by the era of each video. So a playlist for 1958 would start with your video for the earliest date you did in 1958, etc. You have so much content now that you could easily create one playlist for every year. It would be work but it wouldn't require editing every video. Just create a play list for each year and drop the videos for that year into it in order.
@@Ootgreet1 I'll check into that.
I want one of those 58 Chevys !!
I always have wonderful memories when you post these
I'm happy to hear that, Debbie.
To think that my mother was only 14 and I was still 7 years away...is 🤯.
I was born December the 12th, 1958; on a Friday.
Where is Mr. Peabody and the Wayback machine when you need them?
Thanks for showing the world baby me was in
You're welcome, Mark.
OK, Simon? OK!
The very month and year my baby sister was born. I still don't know how to tell her I love her, but we're both still here.
I'm pretty sure that any ad for 1958 model cars would have been aired in the autumn of 1957. Just sayin'.
Those monster movies were the bread and butter of my weekend afternoon TV and Saturday matinee movies in the '60s.
I'm still watching some of these TV shows on MeTV, but without the weird old commercials. Now we have weirder new commercials.
"My sweet sister, I love you."
Monster on the Campus!!!!!!!! I was minus 13 months in 1958, but saw this over here in Australia when I was 8 or 9 in the late 60's - downloaded it a couple of years back and am gonna kick back one wintery night and have a blast watching this silly, but childhood memory, movie. Again Frederick, loving your work - I actually can appreciate the amount of work in gathering, sorting, editing and fine-tuning each video you post - stellar work!
Thanks, Borella. It's a labor of love!
Wonderful video! All a person has to do is compare this video with one of your videos from the 60s or 70s to see how much our nation and culture changed. Your videos are not only entertaining but have great educational value in teaching people how our country changed and evolved pre-Kennedy to post-Kennedy (or "Camelot" as some say:)! Your videos are actually great teaching tools! Thank you! 😀
You're welcome, David, and I appreciate your words.
lol the ad campaign for a science fiction movie in 1958..."you won't want to stay". lol. could use that kind of honesty with todays movies.
My birthday Dec1, 1958 Monday.
I was born November 24th, 1958. I suppose I was home from the hospital by this point.
I would love to travel to the 50s for a short visit like Michael J Fox in Back to the Future - Colgate having toothpaste in a can similar to ones for shaving cream seems like a precursor to the Colgate pump they would come out with in the mid 80s
The month of my birth! Thank Fred. Guess I’m not that old reading other comments 😂
You're just a young'un, Tom
@@FredFlix glad to hear it 😄
The monsters from The 7th Voyage of Simbad remind me those of Jason and the Argonauts. 🤔
Those comic books at 12:12 must have been at home. They look so familiar.
Lestoil! Ha!
... and of course, Colgate with Gardol.
Not bad for a four and a half year old. 💜🤟
Both sets of monsters were created and animated by Ray Harryhausen.
@@FredFlixSo that's why. Five years later we got screechy Talos. Awesome. 💜🤟
Great nostalgia trip, Fred! '58 looked like a great year. I have 7th Voyage, along with several other Harryhausen titles. Great stuff. Love the Paul Frees narration for Monster on the Campus.
Thanks, RR.
I was 2 years old back then and i dont remember anything lol.
The Teddy Bears only had that one hit record, but two of their members went on to varying degrees of fame. Lead singer Annette Kleinbard later changed her name to Carol Connors and wrote or co-wrote some big hits, including "Hey Little Cobra" by The Rip Chords, and Bill Conti's "Theme from Rocky (Gonna Fly Now)". The guy on the left, of course, is Phil Spector, who needs no introduction whatsoever.
Didn't know that about Connors, Ernest.
I find the late '50s and the early '60s interesting. Goody-two-shoes girls and sexy bad girls. Ricky Nelson and Elvis. Wholesome films and horror films. The cold war was in full swing, and I think that horror movies were, in a sense, playing on the fear of the Dirty Commies coming to take over America.
On "The Millionaire", how did John Deresford Tipton give the million dollars away TAX FREE??
I'm assuming the taxes were paid up front.
👍🌞good job
Thanks, wheeler.
Fred, let me guess, you are holding back July 1976 till next week, right 🎉
You got it, arelyt.
That Sinbad movie was made by millionaire 10 year-olds.
The first thing I thought of the was '58 Chevy, mainly because of the perfect example in American Graffiti. That would've been a spectacular time to be around in America. I missed it by a few years.
Only 3 but what a start ricky, johnny,alvin the great syfy from the 50"s TY @fredflix
YW, James.